Several Reasons to Pass on Buying the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 Budget Tablet
Why the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 Tablet Leaves a Lot to Be Desired
The IdeaPad A1 is a budget tablet that boasts and unbelievable low-priced $199 price tag and several impressive features, but although the IdeaPad A1 is a great buy for those looking for a budget tablet, it has lots of flaws that are holding it back.
Small Touchscreen Display
The touchscreen display of a tablet is the center of attention and is where all of the "magic happens" - much like the touchscreen display of a smartphone. When it comes to a tablet's display, bigger is definitely bigger and the 7 inch display of the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 will leave consumers wanting more. The small 7 inch display of the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 will be less than ideal when compared to the standard 10+ inch displays most modern tablets are known for - which are more ideal for watching movies, playing games, running apps, reading eBooks, and browsing the web.
It's Hardware Is Several Generations Behind
It only $199, it's very hard to complain about any of the Lenovo IdeaPad A1's features, and although its hardware is pretty decent considering its asking price, but it's hardware is several generations behind the curve. The Lenovo IdeaPad A1 features a single-core A8 processor, 512MB of RAM, can hold up to 32GB of storage space and boasts an impressive 3 Megapixel rear-facing camera. Unfortunately, the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 sports less than half the normal specs of the modern day tablet standard which consists of a dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM, storage capacities as high as 64GB, excellent battery life and better front and rear-facing cameras.
It's Saddled At Android 2.3 Gingerbread
One of the biggest perks of the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 is that, unlike other budget tablets, the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 features full Android 2.3 Gingerbread support, including Android Market access, but if you're looking for a tablet that geared for the future, the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 isn't the best option. While the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 does offer Android 2.3 Gingerbread support, it's saddled at Android 2.3 and won't be eligible for future Android software updates.
You Get What You Pay For
Unfortunately, when it comes to buying electronics, you're more than likely getting what you pay for and when it comes to the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 tablet, that just so happens to be the case. If you're looking for a solid mobile tablet, there are lots of options available and although the Lenovo IdeaPad A1 is priced for less than half of the average tablet, it also offers less than half of the features as well.
Published by Millionaire Hoy - Featured Contributor in Technology
1 of 2 people in the world named Millionaire, I enjoy writing edgy and and sometimes warped articles (with a splash of humor). I'm from Chicago so I'm always inspired by the crazy things I see everyday. Enjoy. View profile
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2 Comments
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What a short sighted review......
Folks, get off your ridiculous IPad fixation. It's not an IPad, ok, we know that.
"Bigger is better" then why not 32" DISPLAY? For crying out loud it's supposed to be smaller and easier to transport. I find the 10" tablets way too big to be portable or usable in meetings.
Not the latest technology who cares, it will do what it need to do and do it well. Even playing most if not all games and movies. It's not intended to be a movie theater or replace your PS3 fold, get over it. $200 is a steal and Lenovo is right, Honeycomb is optimized for 10" displays. I have used it on 10" and also on the Acer A100 7". Most apps look bad on the 7" because honeycomb assumes your aspect matches 9.7" layouts.
To the author, when you review a product it should be based on its merits and do not compare a Toyota to a Roll Royce, it's ridiculous.